Hi all...
Got into an interesting discussion with Clayton about bioballs outcompeteing LR for aerobic nitrification and I'd like to go deeper into this and see what specifics we can come up with here. Personally, I question the level at which this takes place, but others disagree...
Boomer, who's input we all respect, sees it similarly...a quote of his from a separate thread...
I'm having a hard time accepting that this is actually happening to a significant degree, somebody needs to steer me straight....
Ok...in order to all get on the same page, I'm going to pick up where I left off in my discussion with Clayton in the other thread....
http://www.reeffrontiers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=9443
Ok...these are not "eliminated". They are being produced constantly in the tank and are constantly being processed into different compounds. If they were absent, the process would shut down. Its important to the discussion because they have a lot to do with bacterial populations in the tank to start with.
Ok...agreed that Nitrogen is a component of the entire cycle from beginning to end., I may have misspoke myself here. It's called the nitrogen cycle because it tracks the path of nitrogen through the bacterial transformation of compounds in the tank. The point I was trying to make, while the recycling of Nitrogen is present at every step in the process, it in and of itself Nitrogen is not a fuel for bacterial growth, it is simply a critical ingredient for the metabolic process of the bacteria. An absolutely essential ingredient, yes, but not the limiter here...
for example, in reduction of ammonia/ammonium, the bacteria strip the ammonium molecule (NH4) of hydrogen and affix it with oxygen, and expel it as nitrite (NO2). The nitrogen itself is not used up, it is simply an inert "carrier" that aids in the metabolic process and is then expelled back into the system. So, the amount of nitrogen the bacteria on the bioballs comes in contact with has absolutely nothing to do with their populations. If I'm wrong here, somebody please correct me.
Now here is where I fail to see the logic. How exactly does water flow have a significantly negative effect on bacterial growth? I'll use a standard hang on power filter as an example here, the type with the fabric pads in them. These pads are exposed to a very high rate of direct water flow versus surface area, yet large amounts of bacteria thrive in them, giving them the reputation as a "nitrate factory" as well. Flow obvioulsy does not hinder bacterial growth in these areas, how would it do so on LR?
Even if we do assume this is the case on the top surface of the rock, that does not mean the rock as a whole is not a favorable environment for aerobic bacterial activity. LR is typically very porous...slightly deeper in the rock you will have plenty of surface area that is not subjected to nearly the velocity of flow as the surface, yet still has plenty of nutrient rich, oxygenated water being carried into it. The zones in the rock don't go abruptly from aerobic to anaerobic, there is an oxygen reduction as you deeper, creating an increasingly anoxic zone between the two. The depths at which these occur in the rock are a basic function of rock porosity and water flow.
Ok I see where you are going with this...the rate of nitrate production versus the rate of nitrate reduction is critical to your argument...
continued on next post due to 10000 character limit per thread...
MikeS
Got into an interesting discussion with Clayton about bioballs outcompeteing LR for aerobic nitrification and I'd like to go deeper into this and see what specifics we can come up with here. Personally, I question the level at which this takes place, but others disagree...
clayswim said:Just keep in mind that live rock doesn't do any good for biological filtration as long a wet/dry is installed. Any ammonia and nitrites in the water will be quickly removed by the bio-balls first, leaving nothing for the rock. This creates a situation where you have no nitrifying bacteria on or in the rock.
Boomer, who's input we all respect, sees it similarly...a quote of his from a separate thread...
Originally Posted by Boomer
It is not that bioballs are bad, if you know what you are doing. We used them for 2 decades and you DO NOT always get high nitrates. They are more of a pain in the A_ss. The real reason is that they compete with nitrifying bacteria, which reduces the population density of nitrifying bacteria in the SB or LR. It is here where the Nitrate can be fed right to Facultative Anaerobic Bacteria, which convert it to N2 gas. Nitrification----->Denitrification is best achieved by proximity (bacteria right next to each other, which is not the case with bioballs.)
I'm having a hard time accepting that this is actually happening to a significant degree, somebody needs to steer me straight....
Ok...in order to all get on the same page, I'm going to pick up where I left off in my discussion with Clayton in the other thread....
http://www.reeffrontiers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=9443
clayswim said:I understand what you're getting at, but I think many of your assumptions are incorrect. I'll explain below.
MikeS said:don't confuse a zero test result with its absence in the system....
clayswim said:Toxic ammonia and nitrites are eliminated, that's the entire purpose of biological filters. Whether they're in a different state or not is moot. I'm not even sure what this has to do with our discussion.
Ok...these are not "eliminated". They are being produced constantly in the tank and are constantly being processed into different compounds. If they were absent, the process would shut down. Its important to the discussion because they have a lot to do with bacterial populations in the tank to start with.
clayswim said:The reason trickle filters will always outwork live rock is because the bacteria on the bio-balls DO come into contact with more nitrogen than the bacteria on the live rock.
MikeS said:Nitrogen is the end of the reduction cycle, not the beginning.
clayswim said:Not true, at a basic level nitrogen is the entire cycle. Ammonia, nitrites and nitrates are all nitrogen-based molecules. That's why it's referred to as the "nitrogen cycle".
Ok...agreed that Nitrogen is a component of the entire cycle from beginning to end., I may have misspoke myself here. It's called the nitrogen cycle because it tracks the path of nitrogen through the bacterial transformation of compounds in the tank. The point I was trying to make, while the recycling of Nitrogen is present at every step in the process, it in and of itself Nitrogen is not a fuel for bacterial growth, it is simply a critical ingredient for the metabolic process of the bacteria. An absolutely essential ingredient, yes, but not the limiter here...
for example, in reduction of ammonia/ammonium, the bacteria strip the ammonium molecule (NH4) of hydrogen and affix it with oxygen, and expel it as nitrite (NO2). The nitrogen itself is not used up, it is simply an inert "carrier" that aids in the metabolic process and is then expelled back into the system. So, the amount of nitrogen the bacteria on the bioballs comes in contact with has absolutely nothing to do with their populations. If I'm wrong here, somebody please correct me.
MikeS said:The surface of LR is an ideal place for bacterial growth...lots of surface area, lots of nutrients, exposure to oxygen rich water
clayswim said:The very surface of the rock where water flow is great not only is quite small, but it's also unsuitable for high numbers of bacteria due to the high flow rate of water. Higher numbers grow inside the rock, not in the water column.
Now here is where I fail to see the logic. How exactly does water flow have a significantly negative effect on bacterial growth? I'll use a standard hang on power filter as an example here, the type with the fabric pads in them. These pads are exposed to a very high rate of direct water flow versus surface area, yet large amounts of bacteria thrive in them, giving them the reputation as a "nitrate factory" as well. Flow obvioulsy does not hinder bacterial growth in these areas, how would it do so on LR?
Even if we do assume this is the case on the top surface of the rock, that does not mean the rock as a whole is not a favorable environment for aerobic bacterial activity. LR is typically very porous...slightly deeper in the rock you will have plenty of surface area that is not subjected to nearly the velocity of flow as the surface, yet still has plenty of nutrient rich, oxygenated water being carried into it. The zones in the rock don't go abruptly from aerobic to anaerobic, there is an oxygen reduction as you deeper, creating an increasingly anoxic zone between the two. The depths at which these occur in the rock are a basic function of rock porosity and water flow.
MikeS said:I agree with what you are saying here, however, I thought the issue we were dealing with was nitrate production, not reduction.
clayswim said:In order to tackle reduction you have to look at production. In this case it's extremely important.
Ok I see where you are going with this...the rate of nitrate production versus the rate of nitrate reduction is critical to your argument...
continued on next post due to 10000 character limit per thread...
MikeS